"When the Prescription Pad Is Not Enough": Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Management 2.0.

Jenny S. Radesky, Arathi Reddy, Naomi J. Steiner, M. Augustyn
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Abstract

CASE Jose is a 13-year-old boy who presents to his primary care provider after struggling in school for many years. When he was in the first grade, he was diagnosed at a tertiary center with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. Multiple medication trials have produced few benefits and many side effects including poor sleep, morbid thoughts, lack of motivation, and, according to his parents, "he seemed like a robot."He comes now for his annual physical in April, and the parents tell you that the school is threatening that he be retained in the seventh grade. Parents are very adamant they do not want to try another medication. They have brought you their own and his advisor's Vanderbilt's, which each endorse 7 of 9 inattentive symptoms including trouble organizing, poor attention to detail, and easily distracted and forgetful in daily activities.His birth history and developmental history before beginning formal schooling are unremarkable. His first language was English whereas his parents speak Spanish to each other but not the children. He is healthy and without a history of head trauma, seizures, meningitis, or lead poisoning. An aunt has "learning problems."Jose's family lives in a crowded section of a large urban area. They share an apartment with another family, and both parents are employed full time with his father holding 2 full time jobs working double shifts. Their annual income is at the poverty line. There are 4 children in the family aged between 6 and 13 years.His school has been deemed a "recovery school" because of performing below standard on district-wide achievement tests. His classroom has 27 students, many of whom are English language learners, and he is not on an individualized education plan or 504 accommodations.The family is very concerned about the possibility of retention but have decided that "medicine does not help," and they look to you for other recommendations. Where do you go next?
“当处方笺不够时”:注意缺陷多动障碍管理2.0。
CASEJose是一个13岁的男孩,他在学校挣扎了多年后,向他的初级保健提供者提出了问题。当他一年级的时候,他被诊断出患有注意力缺陷多动障碍。多次药物试验收效甚微,反而产生了许多副作用,包括睡眠不佳、思想病态、缺乏动力,据他的父母说,“他看起来就像个机器人。”他现在四月来做一年一度的体检,他的父母告诉你,学校威胁要把他留在七年级。家长们非常坚决,他们不想尝试其他药物。他们给你带来了他们自己的和他导师的范德比尔特的,每个人都有9种注意力不集中症状中的7种包括组织困难,对细节的注意力不集中,在日常活动中容易分心和健忘。他的出生史和开始正规教育前的发展历史都不引人注目。他的母语是英语,而他的父母彼此说西班牙语,而不是孩子们。他身体健康,无头部外伤、癫痫、脑膜炎或铅中毒史。一位阿姨有“学习问题”。何塞一家住在大城市的一个拥挤的地区。他们和另一个家庭合租一套公寓,父母都有全职工作,他的父亲有两份全职工作,每天两班倒。他们的年收入在贫困线上。家里有4个孩子,年龄在6到13岁之间。由于在全区成绩测试中的表现低于标准,他的学校被认为是“恢复学校”。他的班级有27名学生,其中许多是英语学习者,他没有参加个性化教育计划或504住宿计划。这家人非常担心孩子可能会潴留,但他们认为“药物没有帮助”,他们向你寻求其他建议。你接下来要去哪里?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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